Saturday, May 3, 2025

Our children can’t return to school, Bakassi returnees cry out

Must read

- Advertisement -
tiamin rice
tiamin rice

Etim Ene, Head of the Bakassi Returnees in Cross River, has appealed to the Federal and Cross River Government to assist them return their children to school.

Ene made the appeal in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria in Calabar on Wednesday.

He said that, as displaced people, it was hard for them to afford the education of their children both at the primary and secondary school level.

tiamin rice

“The government of Nigeria has been giving us relief materials and we are grateful, but we need our children to return to school and be trained to become leaders of tomorrow.

READ ALSO:   Benue govt receives 16,169 litres of liquid fertiliser from NEMA

“The present situation of the Bakassi returnees and the environment makes it difficult for the children to attend school even though education is paramount in their lives.

“We are pleading with the government of Nigeria to see how children of displaced persons in Bakassi can be given scholarships from primary to the university levels,” he said.

In his comment, Princewill Ayim, Director-General, State Emergency Management Agency, SEMA, disclosed that the state had about 111,204 registered displaced persons.

whatsApp

According to him, the state does not have the resources to take care of all of them at once.

“In Cross River at the moment, we have communal clashes over land, refugees’ situation and those affected by flood, as well as other natural disasters.

READ ALSO:   57 bag first class as Bingham varsity graduates 2,217

“The governor has been putting in a lot of efforts to ameliorate the situation, but the number is growing everyday making the situation complex,” the DG said.

Mr Ayim however commended organisations like the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, NIMASA, for their support to displaced persons, and appealed to others to do same.

Recall that the Bakassi Peninsula was ceded to Cameroon on Aug. 14, 2008.

Since then, the federal government has embarked on several initiatives to effectively assist Nigerians displaced from that region.

NAN

- Advertisement -

More articles

- Advertisement -

Latest article

- Advertisement -